Flint Water, How to Stop Bullying, Sundance Film Festival
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 220
- Jan 27, 2016 7:00 am
- 1:41:46 mins
Flint Water (1:03) Guest: Mona Hanna-Attisha, MD, Pediatrician at Hurley Children’s Hospital in Flint and Michigan State University Medical School The governor of Flint, Michigan, has declared of state of emergency because of the water crisis and the EPA has stepped in to manage the city’s water because it contains dangerously high levels of lead. The lead is coming from the old pipes that make up Flint’s water system. For nearly two years it was leaching into the bodies of Flint residents because the water wasn’t being treated correctly to prevent pipe corrosion. While this city of about 100,000 people located an hour north of Detroit was being poisoned by its drinking water, state and local officials denied there was even a problem. Emails released by the governor’s office show months of downplaying the dangers and discounting the data put forward by people like Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha. How to Stop Bullying (18:17) Guest: Hana Shepherd, PhD, Sociologist at Rutgers University You know the saying that one bad apple can spoil the bunch. Well, how about one good apple? Researchers from Rutgers, Princeton and Yale Universities spent a year working with what you might call the “good apples” in 56 middle schools to see if they could use the power of peer influence to reduce bullying and other types of student conflict. And it worked impressively. Religious Freedom (28:47) Guest: Daniel Mark, PhD, Assistant Professor of Political Science at Villanova University in Pennsylvania The debate over the role of religion in American life and politics is alive on many fronts. Later this year, the Supreme Court will rule on whether a group of Catholic nuns should be forced to provide their employees with health coverage for contraception. The backlash Indiana faced last year for passing a law that allows people and companies to use their religious beliefs as a legal defense is flaring up again this week. You’ll remember, critics claimed Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act would give businesses cover to disc